Truro News

Former Argos head coach one win away from reaching Super Bowl

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When interviewi­ng with the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, Scott Milanovich was asked why he’d want to give up the Toronto Argonauts’ head-coaching job to become the NFL club’s quarterbac­k coach.

The answer was simple: To win a Super Bowl.

Milanovich and the upstart Jaguars find themselves one win away from the NFL title game. On Sunday, they visit the five-time champion New England Patriots for the AFC championsh­ip.

“I always knew I wanted to be a coach and that (winning the Super Bowl) is something I’ve always dreamed of,” Milanovich said during a telephone interview this week. “Hopefully it can happen in a few weeks but there’s still plenty to do.”

New England is an 8.5-point favourite despite Jacksonvil­le’s 45-42 divisional round win over Pittsburgh last weekend. Then again, the Steelers were sevenpoint favourites despite having lost 30-9 to the Jaguars in October.

“You kind of (let yourself think about being close to Super Bowl) but not really,” Milanovich said. “You get it ... but you’re in such a grind the whole time, it’s just one step after another.

“You go to Pittsburgh, beat them, come back and then you’ve got Tom Brady so you don’t really have much time to think about it. But you can feel it around this city.”

Milanovich, 44, resigned as Argos coach late last January to join the Jaguars. He left just three days after GM Jim Barker was fired.

Barker hired Milanovich in December 2011 and gave the Butler, Pa., native his first CFL headcoachi­ng job. Milanovich was the CFL’S coach of the year in 2012 after leading the Argos to a Grey Cup win but they missed the playoffs in 2016, finishing last in the East Division with a 5-13 record.

“There was uncertaint­y there with regards to the GM and a lot of things,” Milanovich said. “This was a very good job and while my daughters might argue, it wasn’t a major move for the family.

“I just felt like when the call came ... it was time to give this a shot. It was almost like the perfect storm, I guess.”

That’s because Milanovich was hired despite knowing only player-personnel director Chris Polian within the Jaguars organizati­on. Even then, Milanovich met Polian while he was the Indianapol­is Colts GM (2009-11).

Tom Coughlin, who led the New York Giants to two Super Bowls as their head coach, returned to Jacksonvil­le as executive vicepresid­ent of football operations. Head coach Doug Marrone was also hired. Milanovich became quarterbac­k coach after Nathaniel Hackett was promoted to offensive co-ordinator.

Despite those changes, Jacksonvil­le returns to the AFC championsh­ip for the first tine since ‘99 when Coughlin was head coach.

Milanovich said his departure from Toronto, where he compiled a 43-47 record, was very amicable and he remains good friends with many people still with the organizati­on and across the CFL. He followed both his former club and league when he could this year, texting Argos president Michael Copeland before the team’s stunning 27-24 Grey Cup victory over the Calgary Stampeders.

“I had a great time there and am very thankful for the opportunit­y I was given,” Milanovich said. “Sometimes things can get sticky and I’m glad it worked out for everybody.”

Toronto hired Jim Popp as GM and Marc Trestman as head coach — Milanovich worked with both as part of Trestman’s coaching staff in Montreal, winning two Grey Cups there.

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